Wednesday: Pray for the World Church

Pray for the World Church:

  • Churches to grow, world-wide church revivals
  • Pastors – Biblical training and resources, Biblical faithfulness
  • Church in Nepal, Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, Iran, India, China, etc.
  • Perseverance and strength for persecuted Christians
  • God’s provision (food, homes, jobs) for Christians
  • Christian refugees – especially from Syria and Iraq – and those ministering to them
  • Bibles, Christian literature, radio, TV, and internet available to encourage, strengthen, and help grow in the Lord
  • Growing freedom to worship the Lord

Tuesday: Pray for the American Church

Pray for the American Church:

  • Personal revivals leading to church revivals around the country
  • Growing commitment to worship, prayer, discipleship, fellowship
  • Growing commitment to evangelism and missions
  • Growing love for God, his people, and the lost
  • Courageous fidelity to Biblical truth in a culture of compromise
  • Wisdom for pastors and other church leaders
  • Wisdom for leaders of Christian ministries, schools, missions
  • Christians living with Biblical integrity in the workplace, school, neighborhood, and community

Monday: Pray For Your Church

Pray for your church:

  • Growing joy and delight in the Lord, desire and thirst for God
  • Deep hunger for the Word, and abundant grace to live it out
  • Growing burden to pray – individually and corporately
  • Reverent awe of our great and glorious God
  • Gripped by the good news of Jesus’ death and resurrection
  • Personal revivals leading to church revival
  • Practical love and care for one another
  • Striving for unity and peace in our thoughts, words, & actions

Week of Prayer

Acts 1 tells us that after Jesus ascended into heaven, the early disciples gathered together and “with one accord were devoting themselves to prayer” until the Day of Pentecost.  This past Sunday was Ascension Sunday, and the coming Sunday is Pentecost Sunday, so our church is following the example of those early disciples and having a week of focused prayer.  I want to invite you to join us as I post our daily prayer guide.

Book Look: What The Bible Really Teaches About Homosexuality

Kevin DeYoung’s new book What The Bible Really Teaches About Homosexuality is a short, yet incredibly helpful, book written for Christians to better understand the Bible’s teaching on homosexuality. In a world opposing, ridiculing, and often attacking the Scripture’s teachings, this book is a much needed resource for the church.

Part One looks at many of the most relevant verses related to homosexuality. He happily begins with Genesis 1-2 which is foundational for the Biblical understanding of homosexuality as it defines how God designed humanity, sexuality, and marriage (chapter 1).

He then goes on to look at Genesis 19 (chapter 2), Leviticus 18 and 20 (chapter 3), Romans 1 (chapter 4), and I Corinthians 6 and I Timothy 4 (chapter 5). Each chapter addresses the basic issues and shows how the text supports the traditional interpretation. I particularly found his connection of the words used in I Corinthians 6 and I Timothy 4 with the words found in Leviticus 18 and 20 to be quite helpful and conclusive.

Certainly more could be said for each passage, but overall DeYoung does an admirable job summarizing the main points in an accessible way for the every-day Christian. The chapters taken together provide a good case for the traditional Biblical understanding.

Part Two addresses common objections to the Biblical understanding of homosexuality. In chapter 6, he shows that the Bible really does take homosexuality, and indeed all sexual sin, very seriously (this is not an irrelevant issue). Chapter 7 points to the widespread homosexual activity in the Greek and Roman world that counters the often heard argument that Paul wasn’t talking about the same homosexual behavior we see today. In reading this chapter and the earlier one on Romans 1, I was reminded that we are quickly returning to the religious climate of the early church, and that we shouldn’t be surprised by the rise of homosexuality as our nation veers further and further from God.

Other chapters helpfully address the necessity of repentance for the Christian and the church, and the folly of the “wrong side of history” argument. I thought he drifted a bit in chapter 8 as he dissected the sin of gluttony, and again in chapter 12 as he discussed the church at Thyatira in Revelation 2, but perhaps these have been important points in experiences he has had on this issue.

Meanwhile, chapter 11 was spot on as it addressed the objection that the Bible’s position on homosexuality just isn’t fair. He treats the struggle of having homosexual desires, the necessity of celibacy in connection to those desires, and the misery many feel because of the struggle. Here DeYoung moves from scholar to pastor, and addresses these real feelings with both grace and truth. This chapter alone is worth the price of the book for any Christian with friends or family members who identify themselves as homosexual.

All in all, the book makes an excellent resource for any Christian who wants to better understand the Bible’s teaching on this important issue. As a pastor I can see myself recommending it to people in my church and using it as a resource in my own teaching.

Disclaimer: I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

Passion Week Collection

Here are some good posts for Passion Week:

The Passion Week Infographic – Josh Byers
A chronological timeline of the major events that happened during Jesus’ last week before he died and rose again.

Eater Timeline and Geography – Three Passions
This collection of two resources from a few years back is already the most popular post on my blog right now.

The Savior’s Tears of Sovereign Mercy: Palm Sunday – John Piper (DG)
Jesus Turns The Tables: Holy Monday – Jonathan Parnell (DG)
The King We Needed, But Never Wanted: Holy Tuesday – Marshall Segal (DG)
Presumably further reflections will be forthcoming from Desiring God during the rest of the week to help you ponder our Savior’s path to the cross.